2002 Oregon gubernatorial election

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2002 Oregon gubernatorial election

The 2002 Oregon gubernatorial election took place on November 5, 2002. Incumbent Democrat John Kitzhaber was barred by term limits from seeking a third consecutive term; he later successfully ran again in 2010 and 2014. To replace him, former Oregon Supreme Court Associate Justice Ted Kulongoski won a crowded and competitive Democratic primary, while former State Representative Kevin Mannix emerged from an equally competitive Republican primary. The campaign between Kulongoski and Mannix, who were joined by Libertarian nominee Tom Cox, was close and went down to the wire. Ultimately, Kulongoski eked out a narrow margin of victory over Mannix, which was slightly smaller than Cox's total vote share, allowing Kulongoski to win what would be the first of two terms as governor. As of 2024, this is the last time that Oregon voted for a gubernatorial nominee and a U.S. Senate nominee of different political parties.

Quick Facts Nominee, Party ...
2002 Oregon gubernatorial election

 1998 November 5, 2002 2006 
 
Nominee Ted Kulongoski Kevin Mannix
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 618,004 581,785
Percentage 49.0% 46.2%

County results

Kulongoski:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

Mannix:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

Governor before election

John Kitzhaber
Democratic

Elected Governor

Ted Kulongoski
Democratic

Close

Democratic primary

Summarize
Perspective

Candidates

Campaign

Kulongoski obtained the endorsement of labor unions and the backing of governor Kitzhaber. A poll before the election showed Kulongoski at 40%, ahead of former State Treasurer Jim Hill at 23%, and Bev Stein at 19%.[1] Lesser known candidates standing in the Democratic primary included William Allen, campaigning on the belief that Oregon paid too much money to the federal government and should consider seceding, and Caleb Burns standing to reform Oregon's schools.[2]

Results

Results by county:
Ted Kulongoski
  •   50–55%
      45–50%
      40–45%
      35–40%
More information Party, Candidate ...
Democratic Primary results[3]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ted Kulongoski 170,799 48.21
Democratic Jim Hill 92,294 26.05
Democratic Bev Stein 76,517 21.60
Democratic William Peter Allen 6,582 1.86
Democratic Caleb Burns 4,167 1.18
Democratic Write-ins 3,925 1.11
Total votes 354,284 100.00
Close

Republican primary

Candidates

Results

Thumb
Results by county:
Kevin Mannix
  •   45–50%
      40–45%
      35–40%
      30–35%
Jack Roberts
  •   40–45%
      35–40%
      30–35%
Ron Saxton
  •   45–50%
      40–45%
      35–40%
      30–35%
More information Party, Candidate ...
Republican primary results[3]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Mannix 117,194 35.24
Republican Jack Roberts 98,008 29.47
Republican Ron Saxton 93,484 28.11
Republican W. Ames Curtright 10,986 3.30
Republican Roger Weidner 7,395 2.22
Republican Lee R. Shindler 2,266 0.68
Republican Write-ins 3,242 0.97
Total votes 332,575 100.00
Close

General election

Summarize
Perspective

Campaign

Kulongoski focused on education, his support for gay rights and the Oregon Death with Dignity law. Mannix campaigned on his plans to cut taxes to stimulate the economy of Oregon and encouraging partnerships between businesses and colleges. Tom Cox for the Libertarian party and two write in candidates, Richard Alevizos and Gary Spanovich, also stood in the election.[4]

The departure of Kitzhaber, who had opposed plans to build a Columbia Gorge casino, was considered an opportunity for the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs.[5] Tribes invested record amounts of money into Oregon politics in this race, including $40,000 supporting Kulongoski.[6] Kulongoski did not take a position on the issue during the campaign, but later became a supporter of the plan.

Kulongoski campaigned using a motor home and his many visits to bowling alleys became a trademark of his campaign.[7] Early in the campaign Kulongoski held a large lead over Mannix in the polls but the gap narrowed as the election neared after Mannix put Kulongoski on the defensive. Mannix characterised Kulongoski as a strong tax and spender after he endorsed a proposed $313 million income tax rise to avoid cuts in education and other areas.[8] He also attacked Kulongoski for being soft on crime.[7] A poll in October showed Kulongoski at 45%, only 4 percent ahead of Mannix at 41%.[8]

Mannix conceded the election on 6 November 2002 after Kulongoski secured a decisive lead in the vote count. The Libertarian candidate Tom Cox claimed that he was responsible for Kulongoski's victory as his exit polls suggested he took twice as many Republican votes as Democratic votes.[9]

Predictions

More information Source, Ranking ...
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[10] Lean D October 31, 2002
Sabato's Crystal Ball[11] Lean D November 4, 2002
Close

Results

More information Party, Candidate ...
Oregon gubernatorial election, 2002[12]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Ted Kulongoski 618,004 49.03% −15.39%
Republican Kevin Mannix 581,785 46.16% +16.15%
Libertarian Tom Cox 57,760 4.58% +2.77%
Write-ins 2,948 0.23%
Majority 36,219 2.87% −31.54%
Turnout 1,260,497
Democratic hold Swing
Close

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

References

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